Shortround6
Major General
Why they couldn't put a slightly better howitzer preferably with a HEAT shell I'll never understand. Even the French 75 / 1897 would have been better.
And here you are showing your technical ignorance. The British 3in tank howitzer weighed 222lbs and fit in the same gun mount as a 2pdr. The British used a gunnery system in which the gunner controlled the elevation of the gun with a shoulder piece. Seen here near the soldier on the lefts right shoulder.
No geared crank wheel, no ability to fix the gun in elevation. This was one of the limits to british long range gunnery.
The barrel and Breechblock of a French 75 (at least the American version) went 1035lbs, It also recoiled up to 49 inches in a field gun.
BTW the US M2 and M3 tank guns used the same ammo as the French 75. Which rather shows the size gun mount/turret needed. The tank guns got different recoil systems.
The later British 75mm gun that replaced the 6pdr (and fit in it's gun mount) also used the same ammo. or at least the ammo would fit all the guns.
So yeah, if you could put a cannon from a Sherman tank in a Valentine or Crusader it would have been a big improvement.
Heat shells were not a magic solution, it also took several years to get even relatively effective heat shells. Heat shell design was constantly evolving and post war heat shells should, in no way, be used to indicate what a WW II gun/shell could do.
The Germans went through 3 different patterns of 75mm heat shells for the short 75mm gun in the MK IVs (and I am not sure if the last of them was intended more for the half tracks and armoured cars that used that gun.)
Heat shells that were spun (fired from rifled barrels) lost quite a bit of penetration and it took a while to overcome that. Proper shape was also important. British had a heat shell for the 3.7in pack howitzer with a short nose that the Indian army used against the Japanese and it didn't perform that well but since the Japanese tank armor wasn't very thick it worked OK against them.
Heat shells were also short range, last ditch, projectiles in the early years. Work good in the jungle, forests or built up areas. In the desert they had a serious liability. The had to be low velocity in order to function properly and low velocity means they are hard to hit with at long range. US 75mm pack howitzer used one at 1000fps mv while the standard HE could be fired at 1250fps, the German 75mm FK 38 used one at 440mps compared to the normal HE shell being fired at 605mps.
The British did have couple of solutions sitting in the warehouse (so to speak) , the question is why didn't they use them. It took until 1942 to make HE ammo (and then only 40,000 rounds so production started very late?) but there was no real reason why 40mm Bofors projectiles could not have been loaded in 2pdr cartridge cases.
The British were also slow in adopting ABCBC projectiles, they don't show up until 1943, these would have increased the penetration ranges of the 2pdr by 400-500yds and decreased the need to get close on the thicker armored German tanks. The ABCBC projectile, as a type, existed before WW I for naval shells so it is nothing new, it just required (in addition to engineering time) somebody willing to spend the money on them.